Tag Archive for: safety

Reflections on a New Year

Welcome to 2024! Many of us look forward to the new year as a starting date to accomplish great things. Getting your health on track is almost always near the top of that list, and I’m no different. I’m also ready to teach you what you can do to improve your health this year.

Let’s begin the year with something that seems small, almost insignificant, but it’s one thing you shouldn’t ignore: wear something reflective if you’re going to leave your driveway to exercise, walk the dog, or whatever you may do while the mornings and afternoons are so dark.

Here are two examples. I was leaving the fitness club, and out of the corner of my eye I saw a flash of color. It was a guy heading into the club dressed in a dark sweatshirt and sweatpants with a red headband. He was invisible. I never speed out of parking lots, so he was in no danger from me. It just so happens, a man was killed crossing a major street in Grand Rapids that night, again, dressed in all black.

I wear a reflective vest if I’m out walking early. All my running suits have reflective tape built in. It’s a simple thing, but you don’t want to get hurt while you’re trying to improve your health. This is one habit to begin right now to reach your health goals in 2024. And make sure the kids and the dog have reflective tape on their clothing, backpacks, leash, etc., especially now when the days are still short.

What are you prepared to do today? Be reflective!

        Dr. Chet

Echinacea and the Immune System

As I write this, there are 1,098 citations in the PubMed database for echinacea. I looked at every title to see if it was relevant to answering one question: should people who have an autoimmune disease use echinacea for allergies and colds? I examined at least 100 abstracts and downloaded five papers that seemed to be significant. Here’s what I found.

The research on echinacea is a mess. There’s no consistency in the preparations used in research, the subjects included in the studies, the outcome variables that were examined, or the combination of herbs, vitamins, or minerals used in the preparations with echinacea. That’s just to find out if echinacea has any effect on catching or treating a cold. Beyond that outcome, the research is even less clear.

I found two studies that give some perspective on whether echinacea is safe for anyone to use including those who have an autoimmune disease. The first paper is a case study on a patient who suffered a breakdown in the myelin sheath after taking an herbal preparation (1). The paper reviewed all similar cases of echinacea causing similar symptoms. Based on their conclusions, boosting the immune system with echinacea could have negative effects.

There are several problems with this case study and the conclusions the authors made. While they assigned blame to echinacea, none of the subjects used echinacea alone nor were they administered the same way. Some were given orally while two others were injections. They did not examine any measures of immune function in the patients. They did not test for metabolites of echinacea nor any other herb in the blood of the subjects. They deduced that echinacea had to be to blame because of its reputation as an immune booster. One more thing: with the millions of uses of echinacea every day around the world, there were just four cases in 16 years. You read that correctly: four in 16 years. Those are pretty good odds.

In another paper, researchers examined the safety of oral preparations of echinacea (2). This was an old-school approach: instead of selecting research papers to include in a meta-analysis, they examined all the pertinent research one article at a time. They used their knowledge of how drugs are metabolized by the body, how they interact with other medications, and many other indications related to the safety of medications including herbals. They concluded that echinacea does not interact with medications to any degree. While it may change how the medication is metabolized, echinacea doesn’t change how effective the medication is.

More important, they concluded that there’s no indication in the science that echinacea is harmful to those with autoimmune diseases. They explain the reasons why physicians have believed echinacea could have consequences, but there was no evidence it was harmful. There was also no time restriction for the use of echinacea. If you have an autoimmune disease, I urge you to download and read the second reference for yourself. It’s open access and while it’s tough reading, it’s the best resource I’ve found on the issue.

 

The Bottom Line

If you have an autoimmune disease, you must check with your physician before using echinacea; he or she knows the specifics of your condition. Based on my review of the research, there’s no reason you cannot use echinacea to help your immune system when it’s under attack from a virus or allergens for a few days. But that’s not my call to make; there’s always the possibility of an abnormal response or of an allergic reaction to the plant material itself. It’s something you need to talk with your healthcare professional about, but it should be a discussion, not a lecture.

I know you want clear answers, but that’s just not completely possible in this case. What you have now is information with which to make an informed decision.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet
References:
1. Balkan Med J 2016;33:366-9.
2. Planta Med 2016; 82: 17–31.